Fluminense clinches Round of 16 spot, Sundowns earn respect with 0-0 Club World Cup tie
A casual soccer fan at Hard Rock Stadium on Wednesday afternoon for the Club World Cup match between Fluminense and Mamelodi Sundowns would have assumed that the team in bright yellow shirts with green trim and blue shorts was the Brazilian team.
Wrong.
It was South African Sundowns who wore replicas of the Brazilian national team uniforms while Fluminense, a century-old Rio de Janeiro-based club, wore its traditional maroon and green stripes for the match, which ended in a scoreless tie and sent Flu to the knockout stage.
A quick history lesson: During the 1980s, under the direction of South African legend Stanley 'Screamer' Tshabalala, the Sundowns adopted an entertaining style of play with quick short passes known as 'Shoe Shine and Piano.' It was an homage to Brazilian flair and Spain's tiki-taka passing style. Mamelodi's team came to be known as 'The Brazilians,' thus, the yellow and blue uniforms.
The draw was enough for Fluminense to secure second place in Group F behind German team Borussia Dortmund and advance to the Round of 16, where it will face the Group E winner, which will be determined on Wednesday night. River Plate and Inter Milan have four points in Group E and Monterrey has two.
All four Brazilian teams reached the Round of 16. Fluminense joins Flamengo, Palmeiras and Botafogo.
Mamelodi was eliminated, but its players and fans celebrated, nonetheless. Long after the match ended, Mamelodi players were still on the field in front of their fan section applauding their supporters and even breaking into a dance.
Sundowns' Portuguese coach Miguel Cardoso said that although the team did not meet its goal of reaching the knockout round, it heads home stronger and with greater respect around the world.
'To see our team play at such a high level against Fluminense, Dortmund Ulsan, when I hear coaches say to me `Respect for you, respect for you, your team played better than us', that doesn't fulfill our objective, but it makes us much better than we were when we arrived here.
'There are teams that come to the Club World Cup and go away and don't take anything. But we take a lot of things. We take four points and our character in all three matches was outstanding. We take prestige. Our club will be even more well-known. I know we have a strange name, but we have a very strong capacity.'
A diehard Sundowns fan known as 'Josi 14' traveled from Pretoria for Wednesday's game. He was decked head to toe in yellow, blue and green, wore a yellow Brazil visor, and carried a yellow drum.
'Wherever the Sundowns go, I am there,' he said. 'Club World Cup in Japan, I was there. Club World Cup in America, I am here. I am so confident we are going to beat Brazil. We wear their colors. We adopted their style.
'So, if someone adopts your style, there is a master and a student, a learner. So, we are the learners who will show the master how it's done. We are going to show them who are the real Brazilians.'
Cardoso said the joy his team brings to the pitch is what makes the team special.
'People like positive emotions when they go to a match, they want to see football that makes them have joy, makes them cheer, sing, jump and we created amazing emotions in people,' Cardoso said. 'That's why so many people connected with us.'
The coach received text messages from colleagues and soccer officials in Brazil, Spain, France, England. 'I don't even know how they got my number,' he said, smiling. 'But It means Sundowns played at the highest level. We are not happy, but we go back to our country with our head up.'
The Sundowns dominated possession 68 percent to 32 percent and had three shots on goal to none for Fluminense as the crowd of 14,312 looked on. It was the least-attended game at Hard Rock Stadium, which averaged 60,643 fans in the other five games at the venue, but the crowd was spirited.
'We knew is would be an extremely difficult match, they have quality, and they scored three goals against Borussia Dortmund,' said Fluminense defender Ignacio, who was named Man of the Match.
The weather was steamy after a pregame rain shower, and players got hydration breaks midway through each half.
Fluminense entered this Club World Cup aiming to return to good form after inconsistent league results in recent months. They reached the Cariocão final in March but were beaten 2-1 over two legs by Flamengo in a tense Fla–Flu derby. Fluminense, one of four Brazilian teams in the Club World Cup, was in sixth place in the league standings heading into the tournament.
Fluminense is coached by Renato Gaucho, in his sixth stint leading the club, and the roster includes legendary 40-year-old center back Thiago Silva, who played 113 matches for Brazil's national team. Silva began his career as a 14-year-old with Fluminense and went on to a successful career in Europe with AC Milan, Paris Saint-Germain, and Chelsea.
'We achieved what we came here to achieve, qualificiation in the first phase,' Gaucho said. 'We knew we would have a lot of difficulty, but sometimes it is better to suffer and qualify than to want to play well and lose.'
Mamelodi Sundowns host youth clinic
On the eve of Wednesday's match, the Sundowns did a community outreach program in South Florida. Mamelodi, in partnership with Roc Nation Sports International, hosted a clinic for underprivileged children at Mills Pond Park in Fort Lauderdale.
The youth clinic incorporated soccer skills, mentorship and celebration. It was led by Paulo Cardoso, the Sundowns' Head of Academy and Coaching, along with other coaches and club legends and chairman Tlhopie Motsepe. Each child went home with a Sundowns jersey and lasting memories.
Upcoming Club World Cup games at Hard Rock Stadium
Two Round of 16 matches will be held at Hard Rock Stadium. Flamengo will play German giant Bayern Munich Sunday at 4 p.m. The winner of Group H will play the second place Group G team on July 1 at 3 p.m. Real Madrid and RB Salzburg are first and second in Group H heading into their last group match. Juventus and Manchester City lead Group G.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
28 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Monterrey advances to knockout rounds at the Club World Cup with 4-0 victory over Urawa
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — Monterrey scored three goals in a 10-minute span of the first half and went on to defeat the Urawa Red Diamonds 4-0 on Wednesday night and advance to the knockout rounds in the Club World Cup. Monterrey finished second in Group E behind Inter Milan, which defeated River Plate 2-0 in a simultaneous game in Seattle. Monterry plays Borussia Dortmund on Tuesday at Atlanta in the round of 16. The match drew just 14,312 to the 89,702-capacity Rose Bowl. Nelson Deossa ripped the ball from 35 yards out that Urawa goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa got a hand on but couldn't stop in the 30th minute to put Monterrey up 1-0. After a cooling break, Germán Berterame tucked the ball into the bottom right corner of the net to make it 2-0. Jesús Corona added another goal from distance that lofted up and dropped into the goal in the 39th. Berterame added a second goal in stoppage time. The Red Diamonds had been eliminated after losses to River Plate and Inter Milan. Liga MX's Monterrey was scrappy from the start. Alphonso Alvarado had a header in the opening minutes that hit the crossbar. Key Moment Sergio Ramos had scored the only goal for Monterrey in its first two matches before the team unleashed their three goals in the first half, sending the throngs of Rayados fans at the Rose Bowl into a frenzy. Monterrey, which started the day in third in the standings, needed to score because goals mattered in the group standings. Takeaways With a commanding lead, Monterrey eased up in the waning minutes out of caution because four players were handed yellow cards in the previous match against River Plate. If any of the four were carded again, they would be unavailable for the round of 16 match. ___ AP soccer:


Fox Sports
36 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Monterrey advances to knockout rounds at the Club World Cup with 4-0 victory over Urawa
Associated Press PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — Monterrey scored three goals in a 10-minute span of the first half and went on to defeat the Urawa Red Diamonds 4-0 on Wednesday night and advance to the knockout rounds in the Club World Cup. Monterrey finished second in Group E behind Inter Milan, which defeated River Plate 2-0 in a simultaneous game in Seattle. Monterry plays Borussia Dortmund on Tuesday at Atlanta in the round of 16. The match drew just 14,312 to the 89,702-capacity Rose Bowl. Nelson Deossa ripped the ball from 35 yards out that Urawa goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa got a hand on but couldn't stop in the 30th minute to put Monterrey up 1-0. After a cooling break, German Berterame tucked the ball into the bottom right corner of the net to make it 2-0. Jesus Corona added another goal from distance that lofted up and dropped into the goal in the 39th. Berterame added a second goal in stoppage time. The Red Diamonds had been eliminated after losses to River Plate and Inter Milan. Liga MX's Monterrey was scrappy from the start. Alphonso Alvarado had a header in the opening minutes that hit the crossbar. Key Moment Sergio Ramos had scored the only goal for Monterrey in its first two matches before the team unleashed their three goals in the first half, sending the throngs of Rayados fans at the Rose Bowl into a frenzy. Monterrey, which started the day in third in the standings, needed to score because goals mattered in the group standings. Takeaways With a commanding lead, Monterrey eased up in the waning minutes out of caution because four players were handed yellow cards in the previous match against River Plate. If any of the four were carded again, they would be unavailable for the round of 16 match. ___ AP soccer:


Fox Sports
36 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Inter Milan advances at Club World Cup with 2-0 win over River Plate
Associated Press SEATTLE (AP) — Francesco Pio Esposito scored in the 72nd minute and Alessandro Bastoni added an insurance goal in stoppage time to lead Inter Milan to a 2-0 win over River Plate on Wednesday night and into the second round of the Club World Cup. Esposito's goal came just six minutes after River Plate's Lucas Martinez Quarta was shown a red card after taking out the legs of Henrikh Mkhitaryan on a breakaway and preventing a clean shot on goal. Just two minutes before the red card, River Plate came close to taking the lead when Manuel Lanzini found Facundo Colidio in the box with a cross, but Inter Milan goalkeeper Yann Sommer made the save. Bastoni's goal came on a left-footed shot from outside the box in the 93rd minute. Inter Milan finished atop Group E with seven points, two more than Monterrey, which finished second in the group following a 3-0 victory over Urawa Red Diamonds on Wednesday night. River Plate finished in third with four points and Urawa Red Diamonds finished in last, going 0-3. Key Moment Esposito, a 19-year-old striker, notched his first career goal for Inter Milan after assisting on the squad's winning goal in a 2-1 victory against Urawa Red Diamonds on Saturday. Takeaways Inter Milan plays Fluminense — one of four Brazilian clubs to advance to the round of 16 — on Monday in Charlotte, North Carolina. Monterrey plays Borussia Dortmund on Tuesday 1 at Atlanta. ___ AP soccer: